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I love teaching English at Pacific. I remember how exciting it was to read, analyze, and write about literary texts when I was a college student myself, and the small, seminar-sized classes here really allow me to share that enthusiasm with my students.College is a time of great personal as well as intellectual growth, and responding to great literature helps us grow as human beings, helps us understand, appreciate, and analyze the broad range of complex human experience.I have a student-centered approach to teaching, which means classes are not just about me lecturing. They are about all of us engaged in conversation and debate, so that every student gets a chance to push his or her ideas farther.As a science writer and a teacher of professional communication, I also take a very pragmatic approach to my English students' education.In my classes we develop skills in communication, analysis, reasoning, and presentation that transfer very well to their future professional careers.I never let my students forget the "real world" applications of what we do.For example, in my creative writing classes, my students don't just write stories; they also analyze potential markets for the stories they write, and submitting their work to a paying market is built into the class.Finally, I am very grateful to be teaching at a school that really values the individual student.Small class sizes ensure the kinds of interaction necessary to make sure every student gets the most out of their education.

ENGL 106. Content Engineering. A professional writing class that has been designed from the ground up with the awareness that electronic content is dynamic, searchable, measurable, researched, optimized, published, marketed, and monetized in ways that are radically different from static "writing."

ENGL 111. Creative Writing, Fiction and Drama. Creative writing for the marketplace, with an emphasis on practical skills and techniques for placing narrative writing in paying markets.